Investment Advisors 101... ask these questions.
Investment Advisors (IAs) come in all different intellectual,
professional, and alphabetical varieties. They range in
educational qualifications from High School dropout to PhD, and
can be professional Accountants, Insurance Salesmen, Stock
Brokers, Investment Managers, Dentists, Lawyers, TV
personalities, and Gourmet Chefs. Anyone can be an Investment
Advisor! It seems reasonable that your trust should gravitate
toward those who have educational credentials, hands on
experience with their own money, and no direct financial benefit
from the advice provided. Stay safer by finding a fee only
advisor who has just one profession... and the ability to say NO.
Why do people become Investment Advisors? Call me skeptical,
but I don't think it's the ethereal glow they feel after
implementing your new Financial Plan. Actually (once you
appreciate that IAs are the primary delivery system for Wall
Street's huge collection of one-size-fits-all products), you'll
realize that it's the money. No conspiracy here, just a subtle
brainwashing that has convinced you that the Advisor's primary
objective is to protect your family. In reality, the primary
goal of commissioned advisors is to protect their own families,
and they accomplish this by selling Investment Products. The
Investment Advisor label has become a euphemism for product
salesperson just as Financial Planner nearly always means
Insurance salesperson. Stay safer by finding a fee only advisor
who has just one profession... and the ability to say NO.
Serious IAs can be identified by acronyms following their
names (also by dark three piece suits and facial hair), RIA and
CFP being the most common. As professional as this seems,
designations do not create trustworthiness, for several reasons:
IAs must become RIAs to be licensed to sell investment products.
Most practitioners affiliate themselves with major Wall Street
Institutions to defray their start up costs and many are
subsidized in return for pushing their sponsor's products.
Finally, most advisors will remain in bed with one company at a
time throughout their careers, constantly touting the present
firm's products as "best". Hmmm. Hundreds of companies,
thousands of IAs, convincing millions of shoppers (investors)
that they have just purchased the one very best product to
achieve their financial goals. From cradle to grave, most IAs
dance to a tune that's not being played by their clients.
Over the past several years, Wall Street has managed to invade
the once respected Insurance Industry by attaching Mutual Funds
to life insurance and annuity products, making them far too
speculative to achieve their once guaranteed objectives. But the
"variable products" scam dwarfs in potential long-term impact to
the more recent high crime against investors. This is the one
that ignores the (in-your-face-obvious) Conflict of Interest
when Accountants sell investment products! Many professionals
have multiple degrees; few have multiple practices. You deserve
a specialist. If your CPA/Lawyer/Doctor (who's next) can make a
living in his primary practice, why sell investment products?
Greed? Hubris? And why does Wall Street allow these
non-professionals to push investment products? Don't be na